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Full Description
What do the US Marines, freight rail staff, computer programmers, Formula 1 drivers, and health care practitioners have in common? They all experience errors and failures at work and the same set of models can explain why and how they can improve failure reduction.
Failure learning has emerged as a vibrant interdisciplinary area of research. This book brings 14 scholars together in an edited volume containing failure studies and highlighting learning issues in settings such as freight rail, nurses hand washing routines, operating theatres, aviation, computer programming, Formula 1 racing, and the US Marines. In-depth analyses highlight what we know and offer deeper insights into the processes of (non)learning as well as learning. The book contains an overview of 13 commonly used models when studying error and failure learning; and interviews with a flight safety instructor, a surgeon and an international business executive put the models used by scholars to the test and offer insights on how to refine and extend the theories. Synthesizing across settings and theories, the book highlights overlooked aspects of failure learning and outlines new areas of study that can help us better understand how to improve failure reduction.
Contents
1: Kristina Dahlin & You-Ta Chuang: Failure learning: An introduction
2: Kristina Dahlin: Models of failure: The many ways to study failure learning
3: Sunkee Lee & Jisoo Park: The Double-Edged Sword Of Failure Experiences: The Inverted-U Relationship Between Individuals>' Failure Experiences And Subsequent Performance
4: You-Ta Chuang, Jessica Good, & Hsin-Hua Hsiung: To Share or not to Share, to Learn or not to Learn: The role of status hierarchy in learning from failure
5: Brian Park, David W Lehman, & Rangaraj Ramanujam: Causal Attributions of Organizational Failure to Human and Non-Human Factors
6: Michael A. Lapré: Learning from Own and Others>' Success and Failure: It Depends on the Context
7: Bin Zhao: Why is learning from errors easier said than done?
8: Jacob McKnight: Hand Hygiene: Either the easiest way to save lives, or the hardest
9: Michal Tamuz: Organizational Learning about Failure through Simulation in Healthcare
10: Kristina Dahlin & Joel Baum: My accident or yours? Failure learning in the US freight rail industry and the importance of third parties when learning from others.
11: Jerry Guo, Laura Patterson, & Mie Augier: Learning from failure when failure isn't an option
12: Kristina Dahlin & Laura Patterson: Managing Failure: Perspectives from the Frontlines
13: Kristina Dahlin & You-Ta Chuang: Conclusions. New insights about failure learning and areas of future research